Ozone and Cli­ma­te Fri­end­ly Coo­ling in West and Cen­tral Af­ri­ca (RO­CA)

The ROCA project promotes ozone- and climate-friendly cooling technologies in the four African countries Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Mali and Senegal. It started in April 2021 and will run until March 2025. 

Map with partner countries

Partner Countries

RAC appliances are spreading rapidly across Africa, particularly in the cities. In rural areas, on the other hand, there is still a lack of refrigeration equipment for agriculture and medical care. The rising number of RAC will contribute to increased energy needs as well as the use of refrigerant gases, many of which are highly damaging to the ozone layer and the global climate. To limit this dual impact, it is necessary to introduce a wide range of ozone- and climate-friendly cooling solutions.

Technicians at a training for Senegal's network of women in refrigeration, February 2023

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ROCA (Refroidissement respectueux de l'Ozone et du Climat en Afrique de l'Ouest et Centrale) contributes to an increasing use of Green Cooling technologies through improving the policy and regulatory framework on the one hand and building capacity for the use of such technologies on the other.

ROCA includes the following measures: 

  • Analysing current and future cooling demands in the partner countries (RAC inventories)
  • Advisory services for the governments, based on RAC inventories and assessment of existing policies
  • Trainings of RAC technicians on safe handling of natural refrigerants online and in Germany (Cool Trainings) as well as in the partner countries
  • regional workshops on climate finance and business models to promote the accelerated adoption of ozone- and climate-friendly as well as energy-efficient appliances using natural refrigerants
  • Pilot projects using Green Cooling technologies; e.g.
    • Air Conditioning: R290-ACs for public buildings
    • Food Security:
      • cold rooms for agricultural cooperatives in Mali and Senegal;
      • an ice machine for a fishermen's cooperative in Senegal
      • a cold chain between the slaughterhouse and the market in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso
    • Good Health: cooling for vaccines in Burkina Faso and for a hospital in Cameroon

The project is co-funded by the European Union and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).

Pro­kli­ma Im­pact Sto­ries

Let us give the word to people in our project countries.

Learn more about Alimata

"As refrigeration technicians, we contribute to environmental pollution and global warming", explains Alimata COULIBALY KINDO, trainer in refrigeration and air conditioning . Her sector is responsible for around 10% of global greenhouse gas emissions. These emissions are caused by the high electricity consumption of the appliances and the high global warming potential of the refrigerants in use. In October 2022, Ms Coulibaly took part in our Cool Training. "In the GIZ Cool Training, I learnt how to use natural refrigerants to reduce pollution and save energy."
One year later, she says that she uses the content of the training in her lessons. She says: "Other generations will come after us. So we are all called upon to protect this planet!"

The project "Climate and Ozone Friendly Cooling in West and Central Africa (ROCA)" has trained more than 150 instructors in its project countries Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Mali and Senegal. In Burkina Faso alone, those trainers have teached over 2 700 students in 2023.

 

Country: Burkina Faso

Project: ROCA (opens in a new window)

Donors: European Union, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development

Listen to Alimata and other Cool Training participants who explain the advantages of natural refrigerants:

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Learn more about Simplice

Simplice Tirogo is a nurse and head of the centre for health care and social support in Tovor, Burkina Faso. The project 'Ozone and Climate Friendly Cooling in West and Central Africa (ROCA)' supported his health care centre with a vaccine refrigerator in 2023. "Our refrigerator was broken since 2020, so the vaccines had to be stored in a neighbouring village. Each time, we had to travel 15 km to bring back the vaccines in a transport box that lasted cold during only a day or two. That means, the cold chain was not sufficient and many vaccines spoiled", explains Simplice Tirogo. "Since we received the refrigerator, we can store the vaccines and keep them fresh on site. We can now instantly immunise the pregnant women and the children who come here and whose vaccinations had to be postponed before. This is very satisfying. I thank all partners who made this possible."

During the first year after the acquisition, 11 000 persons profited from vaccinations in Tovor and in nine other newly equipped health care centres. The new refrigerators are even more climate-friendly than the previous ones: they are very energy-efficient and run on the natural refrigerant isobutane (R600a). The necessary electricity comes from solar panels. 

 

Country: Burkina Faso

Project: ROCA (opens in a new window)

Donors: European Union, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development

More stories coming soon...

La­test News

Cool Talks: "From the be­gin­ning we de­ci­ded to on­ly work with na­tu­ral ref­ri­ge­r­ants"

18.01.2024 , News :

For this Cool Talk, we have had the opportunity to interview Kim Christensen,  
Founder and CEO of Fenagy. Kim is a mechanical engineer; throughout his career he has been working with many different types of refrigerants. He has been part of the refrigeration industry since his first job in 1994 at the Danish Institute of Technology, who was the forerunner on natural refrigerants in the late '80s and the early '90s.

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Kim Christensen, Founder and CEO of Fenagy

Why joining the Green Cooling Initiative?

Here at Fenagy we are promoting clean cooling and currently we are focused on the heat pump sector, in which we use natural refrigerants and try to combine heating and cooling solutions. So essentially both the cold side and the warm side is of our interest. We joined this initiative because we would like to grow as a company and operate and promote natural refrigerants on a global level.

How does your company contribute to making the RAC sector more climate-friendly?

From the beginning we decided to only work with natural refrigerants. It is part of our DNA. We are using electrical heat pumps where the electricity is coming from renewables. So the heat sources for our heat pumps are ambient air, groundwater, or waste heat. There our combined heat and cooling philosophy comes into play, where we produce cold water for cooling, but we're also producing heat for, for example, district heating. So we have these combined. Basically, we minimize the carbon footprint by doing that because we do not use fossil fuels and we use very little electrical energy to drive a machine that can produce both cooling and heating. A project that we are very proud of right now is a five-megawatt combined district heating and cooling system in Copenhagen.

Speaking of safety: what would you say to people who think natural refrigerants are too risky to handle?

You design it to be safe. If you do that in a proper way and you design accordingly, there are no risk. You take the risk away. With CO2, of course, you design for high pressure. You make your pipes a little bit thicker, your vessels are designed for higher pressures, and then when you service it, you have certain procedures that you follow. For me, it's design and training. It's those two things that are important. Back in 2005 we were the first producer of transcritical CO2 systems, of course, training was a big issue because every new country we went into with this new technology, we had to make sure that people were trained properly. So I would say design and training are the most vital parts. You analyze the risk, make a risk assessment and remove the risk.

Where do you see the biggest obstacle for green cooling technologies at the moment?

When you ask me about obstacles, for a company like us is that it would be that we have a limited capacity. If we were to expand, especially internationally, we would need to have a strategy to go into international markets, and for that we would need partners that operate locally. If you must start from scratch and build your partnerships in loco, you have to be sure that there is a demand and the technology is mature. Is there a demand? Or do you try to create the demand? However, what we see now is that a lot of transcritical CO2 systems are now being exported from the EU to Asia, Africa, and South America, because the growth of the supermarket business in Europe is simply not there anymore.

What would an ideal cooling sector look like in the future?

A sector with combined heating and cooling. We must be able to combine heating and cooling and we have to be able to store heat and cooling. We should use the electrical cooling systems and electrical heating systems in a flexible way. In other words, to use the electrical energy when it's available and cheap and store it for later use. That is the flexibility. By achieving this, our systems would have to be more intelligent. This can be realized using machine learning and artificial intelligence that can optimize the systems.

Find the la­test 'Cool Talks' he­re

In our #Cool Talks” interview series, members of the Green Cooling Initiative Network share their vision of Green Cooling. The GCI Network is an alliance of key players in the refrigeration, air-conditioning & foam sector. It comprises government institutions, international organizations and the private sector. They are united on one goal: the transformation of the cooling sector – for the benefit of people, the environment, and our shared future.

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